Hundred of Noarlunga
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| Noarlunga South Australia | |||||||||||||||
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Hallett Cove is halfway along the hundred coastline. | |||||||||||||||
| Coordinates | 35°04′41″S 138°37′52″E / 35.078°S 138.631°E | ||||||||||||||
| Established | 1846 | ||||||||||||||
| Area | 120 km2 (46.3 sq mi)[1] | ||||||||||||||
| County | Adelaide | ||||||||||||||
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The Hundred of Noarlunga is a cadastral unit of hundred in South Australia covering the far south-western Adelaide metropolitan area south and west of the Sturt River and north and west of the Onkaparinga River.[1][2] It is one of the eleven hundreds of the County of Adelaide stretching from Glenelg in the northwest to Port Noarlunga in the southwest; and spanning inland between the Sturt and Onkaparinga to Bridgewater in the Adelaide foothills. It was named in 1846 by Governor Frederick Robe, Noarlunga being likely derived from 'nurlongga', an indigenous word referring to the curvature in the Onkaparinga River at Old Noarlunga, dubbed Horseshoe Bend by European settlers.
Contemporary Australian linguists believe the name "Noarlunga" is derived from the Kaurna nurlo (corner/curve/bend) + ngga (place).[3] Early South Australian Christian missionaries, Christian Teichelmann and Clamor Schürmann, recorded this meaning of the word in 1840, among about 2000 translations of local Indigenous words.[4]
The Australasian Biospecimen Network Association (ABNA) records Noarlunga as meaning "fishing place", as suggested by various early South Australian historians and repeated by some official sources, such as the City of Onkaparinga[5] and the state government land titles office.[1] However, from the 2010s, expert opinion has favoured the "curve" translation.[6][3]
